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Gardenias: A Novel

Gardenias: A NovelAuthor: Faith Sullivan
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
Category: Book

List Price: $15.00
Buy New: $2.00
as of 11/7/2009 19:17 CST details
You Save: $13.00 (87%)



New (18) Used (33) Collectible (1) from $1.76

Seller: jerkat
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 105609

Media: Paperback
Pages: 392
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 1571310525
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9781571310521
ASIN: 1571310525

Publication Date: August 23, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Gardenias: A Novel
  • Hardcover - Gardenias: A Novel

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A month after the United States enters World War II, the country is in upheaval — and so is the Erhardt family. Nine-year-old Lark, her mother Arlene, and Aunt Betty are heading for San Diego, far away from Harvester, Minnesota and Arlene’s shiftless husband. In the booming wartime economy, Arlene and Betty are soon at work, leaving Lark alone to explore their new neighborhood, a wartime housing project full of others with similarly uprooted lives. Away from prying eyes and small town expectations, the two women begin to forge new lives and new dreams — dreams that Lark isn’t always comfortable with. This richly detailed novel, told through Lark’s observant eyes, reflects the era’s tumultuous events in the everyday dramas of its memorable, finely nuanced characters.



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6



5 out of 5 stars Wonderful Story   January 11, 2009
Jennifer Alberalla (Orchard Park, NY)
This book is the sequil to "The Cape Ann". Yet I liked this book even more. The characters stayed in my head long after I finished the book. I would highly recommend this one.


5 out of 5 stars Gardenia   August 22, 2008
Country Girl (Lincoln, MO)
This was a great book and brought me back to my childhood. I was born 1944 and lived in an Army Barracks for a while. My father served in WWII and died at age 39 so anything that brings back some memories of my childhood gets an A++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ The book was well written and the plot was probably not unique for the times. However it gave me an insight into what was happening in America during the war on the home front.


5 out of 5 stars Gardenias: A Novel   February 18, 2007
Sherrie St Hilaire (Wapato, WA United States)
I couldn't put this book down, as was the case with it's prequil, The Cape Anne. Gardenias is a great journey through the lives of real characters. Their dreams, loves and heartaches are made tangible by Ms. Sullivan's ability to write, with clarity, in her raw and gripping style. You will fall in love with Lark, the child through whom this world is lived. You will become acquainted with the perplexing nature of humans in their struggles to find happiness.


4 out of 5 stars A moving continuation to Sullivan's CAPE ANN   January 11, 2006
Bookreporter.com (New York, New York)
8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Faith Sullivan has written two previous novels set in the fictional small town of Harvester, Minnesota. Her first, THE CAPE ANN, was published in 1988 and focused on six-year-old Lark Erhardt, who narrated the story of her mother's desire for a better life and her father's repeated shattering of those dreams. Readers who fell in love with Lark's combination of innocence and observation, as well as with Sullivan's old-fashioned storytelling abilities, have had to wait a long time to find out more about Lark's story. Now, with GARDENIAS, the wait is finally over.

The novel begins in 1942, as nine-year-old Lark and her newly separated mother and aunt Betty travel by train from southern Minnesota to San Diego. Eager to obtain war work and as much distance as possible from her estranged husband, Lark's mother finds a good office job and a small house. While her mother concentrates on making a comfortable and beautiful home, and her aunt focuses on her rapidly advancing career in fashion, Lark comes to know the motley group of residents, many of them Midwestern transplants, inhabiting their housing project.

Among these neighbors is Shirley, a girl who's Lark's age. Although the bossy, overbearing girl often clashes with Lark, the adults in Lark's life warm quickly to Shirley. Neglected at best and abused at worst, Shirley also shows promising musical talent when she takes piano lessons from Lark's mother and another neighbor. Uncomfortably wise beyond her years, Shirley clues the more innocent Lark into the ways of the world.

During her few years in San Diego, Lark loses much of her innocence, in the wake of the war, her mother's secret love for another man, and her father's increasingly menacing letters. Her narrative voice, which combines a childlike impressionability with keen observation, is still winning, and readers can observe Lark growing into the writer she is obviously meant to become.

Although Sullivan's portrayal of wartime San Diego lacks some of the intimacy of her portrayals of her native southern Minnesota, her affection for the Erhardt family remains and will once again draw readers new and old into the lives of this small, determined and loving family.


--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl



5 out of 5 stars A must read!   November 29, 2005
armchairinterviews.com (Minnesota)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

The long-awaited sequel to Cape Ann has finally arrived.

Lark Erhardt, her mother Arlene, and Aunt Betty arrive in San Diego in 1942, breaking away from their Depression-era lives in Harvester, Minnesota with abusive, gambling Willie Erhardt.

Aunt Betty is still suffering from the death of her baby and the abandonment of her husband, Stanley.

Arlene holds the family together, finding housing in a wartime project and a job as a secretary at Consolidated Aircraft. Betty finds work as a clerk in a big department store.

Lark must cope with a gang of violent and ruthlessly vicious boys who threaten her. She deals with it by mostly staying at home, writing and hiding.

Lark finds a magical painting of a cabin in the woods, and imagines it is in Minnesota and that she is living there. She starts fourth grade and is terribly alone, only her writing to hold on to. She misses Minnesota, but not her father. They attempt to make a home, planting a gardenia bush and some daisies that Lark carefully waters every day.

Betty and Arlene befriend lonely sailors, giving them home-cooked meals on the weekend. Shirley, another misfit girl, finds food, praise, and a safe haven with Lark's family from her own very dysfunctional family life. Shirley is prickly and even sometimes nasty to Lark. Almost a second child in the family, Shirley takes piano lessons from Aunt Betty, and the family helps clothe her and finance her further musical education. For Shirley, music is an escape--just as Lark's writing is a refuge.

Upheavals come in many forms: Willie comes to California to demand their return; Uncle Stanley shows up, telling them he has enlisted. Neighbors in the project become dear friends, as Lark learns their stories and tells them hers. Finally several events shatter all their lives, and change them forever.

Armchair Interviews says: Sullivan is a wonderful and evocative storyteller, making the 1940s and wartime San Diego, the labor movement, the death of Roosevelt, and social upheaval of women in the workforce, the music and the fear, all come alive.





Showing reviews 1-5 of 6




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